試す 金 - 無料
Inside Srinagar’s 2-Km Sunday Economy
Kashmir Observer
|November 30, 2025 Issue
A two-kilometre strip in Lal Chowk turns into a marketplace that feeds families, drives micro-trade and anchors Srinagar’s informal economy.
Every Sunday, Srinagar’s Lal Chowk turns into a city-length fair.
From the Tourist Reception Centre to Hari Singh High Street, the Sunday Market takes over Residency Road with its mix of bargains, chatter and colour.
Shoppers hunt for clothes, kitchenware, books and secondhand finds. Artisans and traders spread out shawls, carpets and handmade work. Food vendors keep the lanes moving.
It's a social hub as much as a market, an informal space that still creates real economic value. Local reporting and past studies help show its scale.
The market has been described as spanning roughly 2-3 kilometres through the city centre and traditionally hosts well over a thousand stalls on busy Sundays.
Past reporting cites figure ranges such as 1,300 vendors and even claims of several thousand people earning livelihoods across linked activities.
One 2016 report referenced a monthly turnover figure circulated by market representatives (reported at ₹20 crore in that piece), illustrating how concentrated weekly trade can add up.
The Sunday Market is in Lal Chowk partly because it offers what is commonly known as “temporal reallocation of prime land.”
Through most of the week, central Srinagar’s high rents restrict this space to established, capital-heavy retailers.
But on Sunday's micro-entrepreneurs briefly access the city's most valuable commercial corridor without bearing the fixed costs of permanent tenancy.
This dynamic use of premium urban space allows low-capital traders to tap into high-footfall zones, turning an otherwise expensive retail district into an accessible marketplace for hundreds of informal workers.
An academic study of the Sunday Market (University of Kashmir / related paper) examined vendor profiles, price-quality perceptions and job satisfaction, finding the market important for both lower cost goods and vendor livelihoods.
このストーリーは、Kashmir Observer の November 30, 2025 Issue 版からのものです。
Magzter GOLD を購読すると、厳選された何千ものプレミアム記事や、10,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスできます。
すでに購読者ですか? サインイン
Kashmir Observer からのその他のストーリー
Kashmir Observer
Blinkit Drops 10-minute Delivery Claim After Labour Min Intervenes
Swiggy, Zepto May Follow Suit
2 mins
JANUARY 14, 2026 ISSUE
Kashmir Observer
One Choice, Many Lives
Aidha Khan
2 mins
JANUARY 14, 2026 ISSUE
Kashmir Observer
Dominik Szoboszlai Plays Hero And Villain In Liverpool's FA Cup Win
Dominik Szoboszlai produced a sublime goal and a ridiculous error as Liverpool eased to a 4-1 win over third-tier Barnsley to reach the FA Cup fourth round.
1 min
JANUARY 14, 2026 ISSUE
Kashmir Observer
Houseboats on Jhelum Searched as Security Drill Intensifies
As part of heightened security arrangements ahead of Republic Day on January 26, police conducted searches at various houseboats along the Jhelum in Srinagar on Tuesday.
1 min
JANUARY 14, 2026 ISSUE
Kashmir Observer
Valley's Long Volley
Why thinking long term matters more than ever in Kashmir.
1 mins
JANUARY 14, 2026 ISSUE
Kashmir Observer
Kashmir Sees 310 Forest Fire Incidents In 2025
Over 880 Hectares of Forest Land Damaged; Kulgam Tops Area Loss
1 min
JANUARY 14, 2026 ISSUE
Kashmir Observer
Authorities Start Mosque Mapping Drive In Kashmir
Imams, Madrassa Teachers Asked To Share Financial & Personal Details
1 min
JANUARY 14, 2026 ISSUE
Kashmir Observer
Mirwaiz Visits Bhushan Bazaz’s Residence, Offers Condolences
Mirwaiz Umar Farooq on Monday visited the residence of the late Kashmiri Pandit intellectual Bhushan Bazaz in New Delhi and offered condolences to the bereaved family.
1 min
JANUARY 14, 2026 ISSUE
Kashmir Observer
Confident India Eye Series Win
Despite Injury Worries
1 mins
JANUARY 14, 2026 ISSUE
Kashmir Observer
WD May Bring Snow From Jan 16
Observer News Service
1 min
JANUARY 14, 2026 ISSUE
Listen
Translate
Change font size
